faërie

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See also: faerie and færie

English

Noun

faërie (plural faëries)

  1. Alternative spelling of faerie.
    • 1758, The Faerie Queene, by Edmund Spenser. A New Edition, with Notes Critical and Explanatory, by Ralph Church, M.A. Late Student of Christ Church, Oxon., volume III, London: William Faden, page 357:
      Whilome it was (as Faëries wont report) / Dame Venus Girdle, by her ’ſteemed deare / What time ſhe us’d to live in wively ſort, / But layd aſide whenſo ſhe us’d her looſer ſport.
    • 1826, The Every-Day Book and Table Book, page 653:
      From Burnsal’s tower the midnight hour / Had toll’d, and its echo was still, / And the elfin band, from faërie land, / Was upon Elboton hill.
    • 1903, Arvède Barine, translated by Helen E. Meyer, La Grande Mademoiselle, 1627-1652, New York, N.Y., London: G. P. Putnam’s Sons; The Knickerbocker Press, page 341:
      The Granddaughter of France was the real head of the people, and as the faëries had been present at her baptism, obstacles and monsters vanished at her approach.
    • 2003, David Lyle Jeffrey, Houses of the Interpreter: Reading Scripture, Reading Culture, Baylor University Press, →ISBN, page 158:
      Trying to pursue a contemporary sense of the poem, we can readily imagine that when in a paradise garden in May a fair woman falls prey to the king of faëries, resulting in her husband’s wending forth from his former glorious condition to “hard heþe” (243), “grete malaise” (240) and to “al day digge & wrote/Er he finde his fille of rote” (255–56), that it would be possible for a medieval reader to see in the story some sort of suggestion of the Fall and the beginning of human erôs-longing in Judaeo-Christian terms.
    • 2011, David Andrew Crawford, Dark Solus: An Assassin’s Tale, Strategic Book Group, →ISBN, page 54:
      Despite their magic talismans and enchanted weapons, and even with the great powers they possessed, the faëries were eventually conquered.